July 1989, Page 22
Other People's Mail
"Gentlemen don't read other people's mail," an idealistic
American official exclaimed between World Wars I and II as he abolished
US cryptographic counterintelligence programs. Times change, however,
and some letters by or to other people are as informative for our
readers as anything we might write ourselves.
US Playing Favorites
To the Editor, Forth Worth Star-Telegram April 5, 1989
The visit by the prime minister of Israel, Yitzhak Shamir, shows
the United States has a double standard when it comes to war crimes
and violations of Geneva Convention guidelines.
Several years ago Kurt Waldheim, president of Austria, was banned
by the State Department from entering the United States. Among the
reasons the State Department gave for its action was Waldheim's
service in World War II as a lieutenant in a German army unit that
deported Yugoslav and Greek nationals from their homelands. These
deportations dearly violated the Geneva Convention on the treatment
of civilians in occupied lands, and as such are war crimes.
Since Yitzhak Shamir has been prime minister of Israel, many Palestinians
have been and are continuing to be expelled from their homes in
the occupied West Bank and Gaza. These deportations are just as
much violations of the Geneva Convention as those Waldheim has been
accused of, and yet our government not only welcomes Shamir but
also provides his government with $3 billion a year in aid.
Margot S. Dakss, Forth Worth, TX
Memphis "Informed" About Israel
To the Editors, The Commercial Appeal April 24, 1989
It's nice to know The Commercial Appeal is on its toes keeping
the city of Memphis informed. The headline and story April 5, advising
us of the sale of Soviet bombers to Libya, should strike fear into
the heart of every red-blooded American.
Actually, paragraph two of this article revealed its true intention—to
warn us that these bombers had enough range to reach Israel. This
would undoubtedly be tragic, as a Libyan bombing run would interrupt
our Israeli allies as they shoot Palestinian children, demolish
Palestinian homes, torture political prisoners, beat children with
clubs and imprison people without charges. Obviously, our Israeli
friends need more of our money, as usual, to beef up their anti-aircraft
defenses, as well as to buy more clubs to break people's bones.
As we all know, the US taxpayer is rolling in cash.
The Commercial Appeal also showed the good sense to bury an article
on page 13 in the April 2 edition concerning revelations contained
in recent declassified Israeli documents. These revealed that the
Israelis arranged the Iran arms deal out of fear that the PLO was
about to arrange to free US hostages, resulting in closer relations
between the United States and the PLO. This interference in US affairs
to promote Israeli interests is obviously of no concern to Memphians.
We would much rather read front-page headlines about the powerful
Libyan air force.
William Bain, Memphis, TN
A Congressional Response
To Mr. Thomas B. Caldwell, Mt. Pleasant, TX April 5, 1989
Thank you for contacting my office. I share your concern and consternation
over the violence in Israel.
Day after day we see and hear news accounts on the front pages
of newspapers, on radio and on TV news: Israeli soldiers armed with
guns battling young Arabs armed with stones. The Palestinians in
the West Bank and the Gaza Strip are losing in this uneven confrontation.
But so are the Israelis. More than 300 Palestinians have been killed
and hundreds injured since Dec. 8, when protests against Israel's
21-year occupation of the territories began.
I agree with you that bullets and dubs are not the answer to this
dispute. Israel must change its ways. When Israel took over the
Gaza Strip in 1967, 1 million Palestinians lived there. Today, 1.5
million do. The Palestinian people are denied rights, services and
opportunities available to Israeli citizens. Their homes are subject
to confiscation, and they are subject to deportation if they protest.
The Palestinians want a homeland and home rule. The Israelis want
security.
The US provides more than $3 billion in aid to Israel a year. Because
of US strategic interest in Israel's security and because of a historical
commitment to human rights, America is uniquely qualified to be
a peacemaker. I agree with you that we can no longer stand by and
watch. We must act to end the violence in the Middle East. I invite
your continued comments. Thank you again for contacting me.
Congressman Jim Chapman (D-TX)
Rep. Howard Nielson (R-UT) Initiates Legislation
To Congressional Colleagues: May 17, 1989
For nearly two full academic years, school-aged children in the
occupied West Bank have been prohibited from attending school. Informal
make-up classes and even the distribution of homework assignments
have been prohibited for students of all ages.
The school closures have had the most profound effect on younger
children, who may not be able to make up those lost years later
in their cognitive development. The school closures have created
an entire generation of 8-year-old illiterates and have dealt a
severe blow to the Palestinians who pride themselves on being the
most educated group in the Arab world.
The Israeli authorities have kept the schools closed as a means
of quieting unrest only in the West Bank. This policy is difficult
to understand in as much as schools in the Gaza Strip have been
allowed to remain open despite the fact that the Gaza Strip has
experienced more violence and unrest during the intifada than the
West Bank.
Under the terms of the Fourth Geneva Convention, an occupying power
has the responsibility to do everything possible to promote the
care and education of children.
Today I am introducing legislation expressing the sense of the
Congress that Israel should take immediate steps to reopen West
Bank schools. As we prepare to vote on a new $3 billion aid package
to Israel in the coming weeks, it is time to let Israel know that
Americans value the right of all people to an education and that
we believe reestablishing a more normal educational environment
on the West Bank would be an important step toward creating a climate
which is more conducive to achieving peace in the region.
Congressman Howard C. Nielson (R-UT)
Levine Flip-Flops on FSX
To the Editors, Forth Worth Star-Telegram May 12, 1989
I read in the Star-Telegram that Rep. Mel Levine of California
thinks the deal President Bush arranged with the Japanese to let
them produce a variant of the F-16 called the FSX is a bad one and
will lead to Japanese competition in the market for fighter planes.
He is opposed, although material from the United States will account
for 40 percent of the cost of the FSX and General
Dynamics will generate approximately $500 million from the contract.
Rep. Levine's opposition to the FSX deal is in sharp contrast to
his strong support of the Israeli Lavi jet fighter project. Development
of the Lavi in Israel was paid for by the American taxpayer. Since
the Israeli air force needed only 300 Lavis, production could only
be justified if Israel obtained overseas orders. Guess what aircraft
the Lavi, now canceled, was to compete against? Yep, the F-16!
I wonder if Rep. Levine is one of those Democrats who has it in
for Rep. Jim Wright. Or perhaps he doesn't like Fort Worth or General
Dynamics. Or maybe he is like several members of the House Foreign
Affairs Committee who seem to put the interests of Israel ahead
of the interests of the United States.
Janeen Wilson, Forth Worth, TX
B'nai B'rith And-Defamation League Memorandum
To Friends of the ADL Feb. 15, 1989
The ADL's Washington office is undertaking a new initiative—to
develop an agency-wide list of ADL leadership who have direct and
close relationships with political officials and other key figures
in the nation's capital. The quality and scope of our local and
national leadership should provide us with a vital resource for
Washington contacts which have not previously been best used. With
your cooperation we can improve this situation.
Attached is a survey form designed by the Washington office to
initiate this program. We would ask that you please complete this
form and return it to our office as soon as possible, but no later
than March 10. We will then send the forms to Washington.
Please be assured that the survey is for internal use only. All
information we receive from you will be treated in confidence. The
Washington office staff will be using key contacts only in close
coordination with staff in the Chicago office.
Barry Morrison, ADL Chicago office
Many Jews Reject Zionist Philosophy
To the Editors, Charleston Gazette April 7, 1989
I come from a line of Sephardic Jews whose migrations eventually
led them to Budapest and finally the United States. My parents,
products of the ethnic polyglot of New York City, rejected all religion
including Judaism. They did instill in me, however, an appreciation
for the historical persecution of the Jews, especially during the
Nazi terror in Europe when most of my family there was slaughtered
by the fascists.
Included in my education on the historical predicament of the Jews
was a strong caveat not to trust Zionists. Such people, my father
warned, are the enemy of Palestinians, Jews and humankind. My father
said Zionists stake their claims to Palestinian territory on Biblical
mandates to self-designated chosen people. To my father, the Bible,
while great reading, lacked the scientific and historical authority
to authenticate either claims of land or "chosenness."
But even if you take the Bible at its word, Dad said, it tells
you that the ancient Jews of the Tigris and the Euphrates are a
far cry from their 20th-century descendants on the banks of the
Danube. To my father, the Jews of Europe and the United States had
"no more claim to Palestine than Mickey Mantle does."
A kind of lesser-light Salman Rushdie, my father believed that
Zionist philosophy was spawned in the drawing rooms and counting
houses of the Hohenzollerns and not in the Warsaw Ghetto. He believed
that modern Zionists learned their military science from their Nazi
persecutors.
"Sounds nice, doesn't it?" he'd say, "for a kid
to buy a tree in Israel to make the desert bloom. But remember,
for each tree that is planted, a Palestinian child, a little girl
who looks like you, is uprooted from her home and family, and made
into a refugee like your cousins who came to this country after
World War II."
My parents lived to see the Stern Gang drive Palestinians off their
land, the US-backed June War of 1967, which ceded the West Bank
to Israel; andthe Sabra and Shatila massacres.But they didn't live
to see the news footage of Israeli soldiers shooting down unarmed
Palestinian children in their refugee camps, nor reports of Israeli
troops attempting to bury Palestinian youths alive. These recall
images of Kristafinacht and later Nazi atrocities.
My father would have looked upon the Palestinian intifada with
no small measure of admiration. Although he was not especially political,
he had a Solomonic sense of justice.
US-backed Zionists (Rabbi Victor Urecki has been their most vocal
spokesman locally) claim to speak for "the Jews." The
fact is that, as the years go by, there are fewer Jews to speak
for. Jews are neither of one people, nor of one class. And in spite
of Zionistic disdain for intermarriage, the majority of Jews, while
not denying their origins, have welcomed opportunities to assimilate
into all the classes, races and nations which make up the world's
population. Where anti-Semitism has obstructed the process, Jews
and many others have fought it—and rightfully so.
It is more and more difficult for Zionism to claim that it speaks
for this singular group, "the Jews." Politically, more
and more Jewish-identified people disclaim the racist, warmongering
policies of Israel, or outright oppose them.
The Palestinian people will not be buried alive, nor will Jewish-claimed
individuals like myself be silenced in our opposition to the colonial
settler-state of Israel. We will march side by side against Zionist
tyranny so that Palestine may live.
Toba Singer, Charleston, SC
Oops-Wrong Form Letter!
To Mr. Ray Faiola, CBS Director of Audience Services Feb. 14, 1989
Recently I received your letter of Jan. 23 which appears to have
been sent to me in error. In connection with the 60 Minutes show
on AIPAC, you wrote that you "regret" my "reaction"
and "disagreed" with my "assertion that the report
was biased."
I am sending you a copy of my original letter in which I thanked
60 Minutes for doing the show, stressed the importance of the subject
and applauded the efforts.
The subject was important and the show contributed to a better
understanding of the damage that can be done when an irresponsible
group tries to interfere with the democratic process. The group
has been very successful in defeating candidates and incumbents
who do not vote exactly as AIPAC wants them to and in electing officials
who will follow the line spelled out for them by AIPAC... It is
sad that they have been so successful as I believe it destroys the
public's confidence in the system and the officials they help elect.
The intimidation of elected officials is not a small crime but a
despicable one against us all.
AIPAC and its supporters deserve condemnation in my opinion. Please
express my appreciation to all of the people responsible for the
show. I applaud them.
Florence Richards, Whittier, CA
Setting the Record Straight
To the Editors, US News and World Report May 9, 1989
Your editorial of May 1, 1989 titled "The Peace of Saladin"
does harm to our national interest. Mr. Zuckerman's writing is biased
and it also misrepresents history He portrays the Palestinian struggle
for human rights as a religious issue. His account of Saladin's
actions during the Crusades is out of context. He implies that all
Muslims are terrorists. It is such biased and twisted representations
as that of Mr. Zuckerman that fuel hostilities toward America from
one fifth of humanity, the Muslim world.
Prime Minister Shamir's proposal for elections, and Mr. Zuckerman's
portrayal of the proposal as the key to Palestinian freedom is shameful
justification for oppression. Refusing to accept the PLO as representatives
of the people in Israeli occupied territories on one hand but holding
them responsiblefor the uprising on the other hand is demagogy.
Mr. Zuckerman writes that Israelis responding with limited force
to the uprising. I understand that so far the Palestinian death
toll in the occupied territories is 688, that there are 39,800 wounded
or disabled, and that 3,700 miscarriages have resulted from tear
gas. Hundreds of houses and thousands of trees have been destroyed,
and then there are 12,000 imprisoned Palestinians. What would Mr.
Zuckerman consider a harsh occupation? Genocide?
Please use the power of your pen carefully Don't let the narrow
interest of a powerful minority shape your writing and thus our
national thinking. Let our values of freedom, human rights, justice
and equality guide your writing.
Rafique A. Khan, Los Angeles, CA |